Kurt Früh(1915-1979)
- Director
- Writer
- Second Unit Director or Assistant Director
Kurt Früh (1915-1979) was most probably Switzerland's most popular film
director ever. Früh was born in 1915 in St. Gallen (Switzerland). When
he was a child, his family moved to Zurich, where Früh studied
linguistics and music at the university. Already from 1933, he was
head, author and director at the Zurich Volksbühne which stood under
Brecht's influence. In 1936, Früh inaugurated a few political cabarets
for which Switzerland got famous during World War II and which stood in
the service of "mental defense of the state". Many of the performers
such as Zarli Carigiet, Ruedi Walter or Margrit Rainer acted also in
his films. Also in 1936, Früh started his career as a director for
Central Film in Zurich, he put plays on stage and also directed musical
works. Between 1949 and 1953, he was assistant director of Leopold
Lindtberg, who also made a few of the most famous classical Swiss
movies. In 1955, Früh saw his break-trough with "Polizischt Wäckerli",
in the main role was Schaggi Streuli, one of Switzerland's most beloved
actors. In his 1957 film "Bäckerei Zürrer" which plays in the Zurich
Langstrasse neighborhood, Früh portrayed bums, boozers, small criminals
and whores for which he showed also in his other movies much sympathy.
Up to the eighties, the Swiss TV broadcast approximately each month
Früh's most popular movies, such as "Oberstadtgass" (1956), "Hinter den
sieben Gleisen" (1959), Cafe Odeon (1959), "Der Teufel hat gut
lachen/Il diavolo ride" (1960), and the wonderfully said movie
"Dällebach Kari" (1970), one of Früh's last works with the
unforgettable score by Mani Matter (1936-1972). From 1964-1967, Früh
was head of the ressort theatre at the Swiss TV and professor for film
at the Museum of Art in Zurich, where he helped develop the New Swiss
Film, the Swiss adaptation of Nouvelle Vague. Kurt Früh died nearly
forgotten in 1979 in Boswil (Canton of Berne, Switzerland).